The concession agreement for the construction of the Accra Sky Train
Project has been signed on the sidelines of the ongoing African
Investment Forum in Johannesburg, South Africa.
The signing of the agreement means feasibility studies, spanning a
period of nine months to determine the bankability of the project will
commence, with the investors assuring that the first station for the
Accra Sky Train project will be opened in 9 months.
At the signing ceremony on Monday, November 11, President Akufo-Addo
described it as “a happy day for Ghana and her good people”, adding that
it is a “critical step towards the consummation of this project”, and a
vivid testimony of the value of the African Investment Forum.
The President thanked the SkyTrain Consortium for putting together the wherewithal that is allowing this project to go forward.
The Accra Sky Train, according to him, “is meeting an important
infrastructural need, and hopefully the step that is being taken today,
that is signing the concession agreement, is bringing the project to
much nearer conclusion. That is what we are hoping for so that the
people of Ghana benefit from the progress and the relief that a modern
system of transport in our capital city is going to bring.”
SkyTrain systems are pre-fabricated using precision moulded,
pre-stressed reinforced concrete components that are capable of being
installed at a very rapid rate, meaning that there is minimal disruption
and congestion in the urban area that is undergoing installation and
commissioning.
The proposed SkyTrain initiative in Accra provides for the development
of five routes, four of which are comprised of radial routes that
originate at the proposed SkyTrain Terminal, at the heart of Accra, at a
newly developed Kwame Nkrumah circle, and one (1) route that provides
and intra-city commuter loop distribution service, also emanating from
Circle.
The Project envisages a total track length across all routes of 194 kilometres.
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